Winnipeg

Winnipeg
Winnipegger, n.
/win"euh peg'/, n.
1. a city in and the capital of Manitoba, in S Canada, on the Red River. 560,874.
2. Lake, a lake in S Canada, in Manitoba. ab. 260 mi. (420 km) long; ab. 9300 sq. mi. (24,085 sq. km).
3. a river in S Canada, flowing NW from the Lake of the Woods to Lake Winnipeg. ab. 200 mi. (320 km) long.

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City (pop., 2001: metro. area, 671,274), capital of Manitoba, Canada.

Located at the confluence of the Red River of the North and the Assiniboine River, Winnipeg was settled as a French fur-trading post in 1738. In the early 19th century Thomas Douglas founded a Scottish settlement there. Development ensued with the arrival of Canada's first transcontinental railroad in 1881. Following disastrous floods in 1950, much of the city was rebuilt. The fourth largest city in Canada, it is a cultural, financial, commercial, industrial, and government centre.

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 city, capital (1870) of Manitoba, Canada. It lies at the confluence of the Red and Assiniboine (Assiniboine River) rivers, 40 miles (65 km) southwest of Lake Winnipeg (Winnipeg, Lake) and 60 miles (95 km) north of the U.S. state of Minnesota. Winnipeg is the economic and cultural centre of Manitoba and is at the heart of the most populous metropolitan area in central Canada.

      Fort-Rouge was established on the site in 1738 by the French voyageur La Vérendrye. It was followed later by Fort Gibraltar (built by the North West Company in 1810) and Fort Garry (Hudson's Bay Company, 1821). These, together with the Red River Settlement (founded 1811–12) of Scottish colonists, formed the nucleus of the new city, the name of which was taken from that of Lake Winnipeg and derived from the Cree Indian words win nipee (“muddy water”).

      The arrival in 1885 of the Canadian Pacific (Canadian Pacific Railway Ltd.), the first Canadian transcontinental railroad, led to Winnipeg's becoming the major grain market and warehousing and distributing point for the Prairie Provinces. It has remained the headquarters of the Canadian grain industry. The city also serves the mining districts of the north and is now one of Canada's largest industrial, communications, commercial, and financial centres. The economy is highly diversified; major activities include food processing, finance, telecommunications, printing, and the manufacture of apparel, transportation equipment, and aerospace products and technology. Winnipeg is also home to the Royal Canadian Mint, which produces all of the country's coinage. The city's industrial growth has been stimulated by the availability of cheap hydroelectric power (from plants on the Winnipeg River) and excellent transportation facilities. A major junction on two transcontinental rail lines and the Trans-Canada Highway, Winnipeg also has a busy international airport.

      Following disastrous floods in 1950, the 30-mile (48-km) Red River Floodway was built (completed 1968), allowing that river's floodwaters to bypass the city. In 1972 the municipalities that comprised the Metropolitan Corporation of Greater Winnipeg (including Saint Boniface, Saint James, East and West Kildonan, Transcona and Saint Vital) were absorbed into the city.

      A cosmopolitan city of many ethnic groups (including sizable populations of French-speaking and native peoples), Winnipeg dominates Manitoba's cultural life. It is the home of a symphony orchestra, the Manitoba Opera, the Royal Winnipeg Ballet, and the Manitoba Theatre Centre. It is the seat of the University of Manitoba (1877), the University of Winnipeg (1871), and Red River College (1938). The provincial Legislative Building (1920) is a neoclassical structure with the well-known Golden Boy (a bronze statue of a youth carrying a torch in his right hand and a sheaf of wheat over his left arm) on top of its dome. The city's Centennial Centre includes the Museum of Man and Nature and a planetarium, and the Winnipeg Art Gallery has an extensive collection of Inuit art.

      The Forks National Historic Site, at the junction of the Red and Assiniboine rivers, commemorates the history of the Canadian West. Assiniboine Park includes a zoo and conservatory. Also nearby are Bird's Hill (northeast) and Beaudry (west) provincial parks. Winnipeg has a professional Canadian gridiron football team, the Blue Bombers. The city plays host to an annual (August) international festival of folk arts. Inc. 1873. Pop. (2006) city, 633,451; metro. area, 694,668.

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Universalium. 2010.

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